
Unlike Zohran Mamdani, most Dems want prosperity — not class warfare
They're badly in need of a history lesson: Every socialist revolution has failed and set back the goals it meant to accomplish.
Everywhere it has been tried, socialism has meant economic decay at best and mass death at worst.
The global death toll from socialism and communism is roughly 100 million souls.
Whether the victims died in Stalinist gulags, Mao's Great Leap famine or Pol Pot's 'killing fields,' the underlying logic was the same: When the state owns everything, the individual owns nothing — not even his life.
Mamdani's own platform may seem more anodyne, but it is a distilled sampler of socialism's greatest failures: nationalized businesses (public utilities), price controls (rent freezes, 'affordable' everything) and government-run retail.
Meanwhile, capitalism's ledger shows no mass graves — only the lifted living standards of billions.
Even China's rise from Mao-made famine to middle-class affluence began the day Deng Xiaoping opened markets and let peasants keep what they grew.
Mamdani promises city-run groceries to 'bring down prices,' as if 8 million New Yorkers will flock to a public-owned store without remembering Venezuela's empty-shelf socialism.
He proposes a rent freeze, forcing down the price of housing. Berlin's leftist government tried the same stunt with its 2020 Mietendeckel: Apartment listings collapsed 41.5% in a single year.
He proposes fare-free buses. Tallinn, Estonia, made transit free in 2013; a Royal Institute of Technology audit found ridership rose barely 3% and car traffic scarcely fell, even as taxpayers picked up the heavy bill.
He proposes no-cost child care. Quebec's celebrated '$5-a-day' day care ballooned in cost and delivered a 'sizeable negative shock to non-cognitive skills' that lingered into adolescence, per the National Bureau of Economic Research — along with higher crime and lower life satisfaction.
All this is funded, naturally, by punishing 'the rich' — until they decamp to Florida, just as over a million wealth-holders fled Fidel Castro's Cuba, 6 million Venezuelans (most college educated) abandoned Nicolás Maduro's 'Bolivarian miracle' and 15% of Russia's millionaires bolted in a single year once Vladimir Putin's neo-Soviet expansion started.
The socialist mayoral hopeful's web site also touts 'public ownership of utilities,' a polite phrase for state takeover of the power grid.
Another of Mamdani's proposals is boosting the city's minimum wage to $30 an hour by 2030 — an 82% jump.
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That would saddle small employers with entry-level labor costs near $65,000 a year, forcing many to lay off staff, automate or close — and leave fewer rungs on the ladder for new workers.
Then there's policing. This may be the part of Mamdani's platform that is most acutely not what it seems.
In 2020, Mamdani embraced 'defund the police' during the city's summer of riots. Now he says he merely wants to shift funds to a new Department of Community Safety.
Here's the irony socialists rarely acknowledge: Every successful socialist leader, from Venezuela's Hugo Chávez and Maduro Venezuela to Colombia's Gustavo Petro and Mexico's Claudia Sheinbaum's Mexico, has depended on a stronger, more intrusive police force to enforce rationing, suppress dissent and make those neat five-year plans look 'orderly.'
Finally, his 'Trump-proofing' proposal — getting ICE out of NYC and ending any cooperation with the feds — sounds like an open invitation for gangs like the Tren de Aragua and MS-13.
Do New York City socialists expect everyone to hold hands and sing Kumbaya?
Mamdani's agenda is doomed to fail because it doesn't understand that NYC's problem is not capitalism but its own government.
High costs in New York stem from layers of policy that strangle them: restrictive zoning locks 75% of residential land into one- and two-family lots, prevailing-wage and union rules push subway construction to an eye-watering $2 billion to $3 billion per mile, and the New York City Housing Authority's $80 billion repair backlog shows what happens when government runs housing.
Add the nation's heaviest big-city tax burden and miles of red tape, and you've got an economy in which prices climb and paychecks stall.
Why are Democrats doing this to themselves? Part of the answer is Donald Trump.
An unconventional Republican back in the White House has driven many liberals to think the best response is a hard-left hook.
But backing Mamdani's agenda clashes with that of the majority of Democratic voters who value prosperity over class warfare — among them the millions of Latinos who've escaped socialism, support Democrats and now face a party willing to impose on them the very ideas that prompted them to flee.
Santiago Vidal Calvo is a policy analyst at the Manhattan Institute. The views are his own and not those of the Manhattan Institute.
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New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Top House Dem dodges question about Zohran Mamdani identifying as African American on Columbia application
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries refused to delve into the controversy surrounding socialist New York mayoral hopeful Zohran Mamdani's description of himself as 'black or African American' on his application for Columbia University in 2009. Jeffries (D-NY), the highest-ranking black elected official in the US, contorted live on air to dodge the controversy and changed the topic to affordability concerns that have been top of mind for voters. 'The issue that we have to deal with in New York City, which our Democratic nominee did talk about extensively during the primary campaign, is affordability,' Jeffries told Rev. Al Sharpton's 'PoliticsNation' Saturday. 'Whoever's going to be the next mayor of the city of New York really needs to articulate a concrete plan for making sure that working-class communities, including working-class neighborhoods of color, can still have a place in our great city,' the Brooklyn Democrat went on. Last week, a bombshell New York Times report based on hacked data revealed that Mamdani identified as 'black or African American' and 'Asian' on his 2009 Columbia application. 3 Hakeem Jeffries has not endorsed in the New York City mayoral election. MSNBC 3 Zohran Mamdani admitted that he described himself as 'black or African American' on his application to Columbia University. Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto/Shutterstock Mamdani, who was born in Uganda and immigrated to the US when he was 7, had campaigned as a Muslim of South Asian descent. A recently resurfaced video from ambush interviewer 'Crackhead Barney' shows the Assemblyman from Queens describing himself as 'an Indian, Ugandan, New Yorker.' In that video, he was asked if he'd consider himself African American, and he insisted: 'No, I would not.' The self-described democratic socialist has since explained that he views himself as 'an American who was born in Africa.' 'Most college applications don't have a box for Indian-Ugandans, so I checked multiple boxes trying to capture the fullness of my background,' the Democratic mayoral nominee told the New York Times. Jeffries has refrained from endorsing Mamdani, though he has talked with him and congratulated him on his upset victory over former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic primary. Mamdani is now squaring off against incumbent Mayor Adams in the November election. The top Democrat in the House has split with Mamdani in the past, including over his refusal to denounce the term 'globalize the intifada,' which is widely seen as a rallying cry to harm the Jews. 'Globalizing the intifada, by way of example, is not an acceptable phrasing,' Jeffries told ABC's 'This Week' last week. 'He's going to have to clarify his position on that as he moves forward.' Mamdani had been pressed on that term repeatedly during an interview on NBC's 'Meet the Press' last week. 3 The self-described democratic socialist is the frontrunner in the mayoral election. AFP via Getty Images 'That's not language that I use. The language that I use and the language that I will continue to use to lead this city is that which speaks clearly to my intent, which is an intent grounded in a belief in universal human rights,' Mamdani told Kristen Welker on the program while getting pressed three times. 'I don't believe that the role of the mayor is to police speech in that manner.'

Wall Street Journal
an hour ago
- Wall Street Journal
Why Have College Grads Fallen for Mamdani?
There has been much ado about Zohran Mamdani's win in New York's Democratic mayoral primary, but the Mamdani phenomenon is nothing new ('College Grads a Driving Force in New York Race,' Page One, June 27). He is a clever and charismatic, slick-talking Pied Piper for naive young people, many of whom come from lives of privilege. Mr. Mamdani may become mayor for term—but I have faith that his appeal extends only to a handful of college towns and a few deep blue counties, severely limiting his ability to cause damage on a national level. Dave Thomas


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
Jewish group slams Democratic NYC mayoral hopeful over 'sick' mockery of 'sacred' traditions
A Jewish advocacy group is blasting Democratic New York City mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani for sharing a video mocking Hanukkah Jewish traditions on social media. The organization, Stop Antisemitism, says Mamdani posted the "sick" video to his X account last year. The video is originally from the Geeta Brothers Duet Group, a satirical and comedic duo who dressed themselves in stereotypical Jewish garb for the performance. "Zohran Mamdani posts Indian men cosplaying Jews, spinning dreidels and lighting the menorah," Stop Antisemitism wrote in a statement on X. "Our holidays and traditions are sacred and not for your comedic pleasure, Zohran Mamdani – this is sick," the group added, tagging the mayoral candidate. Mamdani had posted the video in December 2024, adding the caption, "Happy 3rd night of Hanukkah from Astoria and Long Island City." The video originates from the 2015 parody album "Punjabi Christmas Album Hits" from the Geeta Brothers. Mamdani posted another video from the same album on Christmas Eve, this one based on "Jingle Bells." "Wishing you all a very merry Christmas from Astoria and Long Island City," he wrote at the time. Mamdani's campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. Accusations of antisemitism have harried Mamdani's campaign from its outset. The self-proclaimed democratic socialist has refused multiple times to recognize Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state, and he has supported the BDS movement against Israel. "I believe Israel has a right to exist," he said during a mayoral primary debate in June. "As a Jewish state?" the moderator pressed. "As a state with equal rights," Mamdani said. He later elaborated on his opposition to Israel being a Jewish state in an interview with Fox 5. "I'm not comfortable supporting any state that has a hierarchy of citizenship on the basis of religion or anything else," he said. Mamdani, a Muslim, has also faced criticism for refusing to condemn the phrase "globalize the intifada." StopAntisemitism founder Liora Rez argued last week that electing Mamdani mayor would not only be "catastrophic" for Jewish residents, but all who reside in the city. "If Zohran Mamdani was elected as mayor, it would be hands down catastrophic for Jewish residents of New York City," Rez told Fox News Digital. "And we would even take it a step further where citizens of New York City in general, due to his very troubling stances on socialism, would greatly suffer as well." "I think individuals who are concerned that Zohran Mamdani is antisemitic have every single right to be concerned considering his past behavior," Rez added. "We can list dozens of examples of his past antisemitic adjacent and direct antisemitic actions."